As part of the submission process, authors are required to check off their submission's compliance with all of the following items, and submissions may be returned to authors that do not adhere to these guidelines.
The submission has not been previously published, nor is it before another journal for consideration (or an explanation has been provided in Comments to the Editor).
The submission file is in OpenOffice, Microsoft Word, or RTF document file format.
Where available, URLs for the references have been provided.
The text is single-spaced; uses a 12-point font; employs italics, rather than underlining (except with URL addresses); and all illustrations, figures, and tables are placed within the text at the appropriate points, rather than at the end.
The text adheres to the stylistic and bibliographic requirements outlined in the Author Guidelines.
The article should correspond with the subject of management and/or entrepreneurship which is the result of researches (quantitative or qualitative) or conceptual studies. The article must never be, and is not being, in the process of publication of any media. The article should be written in accordance with the following writing guidelines. This writing guidelines consists of two parts, namely writing format and writing systematics.
1. Typing
The article should be typed using the Microsoft Word program, in Times New Roman letters with the size of 10 pt, single spaced (before = 0 pt, after = 0 pt), and double columns.
The paper size is A4. The boundary of upper, lower, and side margins are 3 cm.
The article’s length is around 10 pages (not including references and attachments).
The article should be written in good and correct American English.
2. Writing the article
Title
Title of the article is written on the first page.
Title should contain 12 words at the most.
The title should contain the keywords of research results and avoid the following terms: analysis, influence, relationship, study, case study, impact, role.
The title should be written in bold capital letters, with a letter size of 14 pt, single spaced and centered.
If there is an additional title which belongs to the main title, the additional title is written after the main title, in capital letters and separated from the main title by a colon.
Author’s identity
Author’s identity is written on the first page.
The author’s name is written without academic degree and last name must not be abbreviated, bold, 11 pt.
The author’s identity should be accompanied with instution’s name and institution’s address (street name, city, zip code, country), and email address, not bold, 11 pt.
If there are more than one authors, the identity of the other author(s) should be written completely.
Abstract
The abstract should be written in one paragraph, single spaced, in Times New Roman letter with a size of 11 pt.
The length of the abstract should not exceed 150-250 words and accompanied by three to five keywords.
The keywords are written in Italics, in regular letters with a capital at the beginning of the first keyword and ended with a period.
Writing the Sub-title
Sub-title (level 1) is written uprightly in bold letters, with a capital letter at the beginning of each word, and centered.
Sub-sub-title (level 2) is written in bold italics, with a capital letter at the beginning of each word, and centered.
Sub-sub-sub-title (level 3) is written in bold italics, with a capital letter at the beginning of each word, and left aligned.
Sub-sub-sub-sub-title (level 4) is written in regular italics, with a capital letter at the beginning of paragraph and ended with a period.
Conjunctive and preposition in each level is not written in capital letters.
Presenting Tables
Each table is given a chronological number (Arabic numeral), title of the table, and source if the table is taken from other sources.
Number and title of table is written above the table, in bold letters and left aligned.
Number of table is written above title of table, with a capital letter at the beginning of each word.
Table title is written under table number, with a capital letter at the beginning of each word.
Table source is written under the table, left aligned. Example: Source: World bank, 2016.
Table is written in 10 pt. letters and single spaced.
Table design: Table title and column title, column title and table content, table content and table source, are separated by horizontal lines (vertical lines are not necessary).
Chronological numbers are not necessary inside the table.
Presenting Picture/Diagram
Each picture is given a chronological number (Arabic numeral), title of the picture, and source if the picture is taken from other sources.
Number and title of picture is written below the picture, written in one line, in bold letters and left aligned. No. of picture is ended with a period.
Number and title of picture is written with a capital letter at the beginning of the sentence.
Picture source is written under the number and title of picture, left aligned.
The letters in the picture is written in 10 pt. letters and single spaced.
Presenting Direct quotation
Short direct quotation (< 40 words) is written inside the sentence, using quotation marks and accompanied by source of the quotation, which includes author’s last name, year, and number of page.
Long direct quotation (> 40 words) is typed without quotation marks, single spaced, and indented 0.5 inch (1,3 cm or five spaces) from left margin. Quotation should be accompanied by source of the quotation, which includes author’s last name, year, and no. of page.
Presenting Indirect quotation
Indirect quotation is written inside the sentence without quotation marks and accompanied by source of the quotation which includes author’s last name and year.
- Book with two authors
Brigham, E. F. & Ehrhardt, M.C. (2010). Financial management: Theory & Practice. Thirteen Edition. Boston: South-Western College Publishing.
- Article from a book containing a compilation of articles
Moretti, E. (2011). Local labor market. In O. Ashenfelter, & D. Card (Eds.), Handbook of labor economics volume 4B (pp. 1237–1313). North Holland: Elsevier.
Weinberg, M. C. (2011). More evidence on the performance of merger simulations. American Economic Review, 101(3), 51–55.
- Newspaper article with author
Schwartz, J. (2012, September 30). Obesity affects economic, social status. The Washington Post, pp. Al, A4.
- Newspaper article with no author
New drug appears to sharply cut risk of death from heart failure. (2012, July 15). The Washington Post, p. A12.
- Paper from Seminar, workshop, and training
Suharyadi, A. (2011). Mix-methods approach and attributed problems in impacts evaluation. A paper presented in the workshop: Impacts Evaluation in the Social Intervention Program, Depok, Indonesia.
- Thesis, dissertation, research report
Johnson, T. L. (2011). Information in options markets. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, University of Stanford, Stanford.
- Institution official document
Bursa Efek Indonesia. (2010). Directory of the indonesian capital market: Supporting institutions and supporting professionals. Jakarta: Bursa Efek Indonesia.
- Internet
Strauss, J. (2011). Global growth hits soft patch, expected to rebound. Retrieved November 18, 2013, from http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/survey/2011/NEW06171A.